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What we know about the Paris attackers

A fake Syrian refugee and a former baker who never spoke about religion are among the six men formerly named in connection with the Paris attacks which have killed 132 people and left more than 350 injured.

The details emerging paint a disturbing picture of the ease in which the killers slipped through the net of authorities and perpetrated the worst atrocity seen in France since World War II.

Although many appeared outwardly well adjusted, accounts of the calm and determined manner in which the Bataclan shooters conducted the massacre have raised the possibility the terrorists received military training in Syria.

They likely knew they were being watched and used encrypted communication to plan the attacks without alerting authorities, NY Times report.

After suspecting all seven of the terrorists were killed in the attacks, authorities now believe at least 20 people were involved in a cell that carried out the attack.

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Mostefaï, 29, was identified from a severed finger after it was torn off when he set off his suicide bomb vest as police stormed the Bataclan Theatre early on Saturday morning.

A French national born to an Algerian father and a Portuguese mother on November 21, 1985, Mostefai reportedly grew up in the working class Paris suburb of Courcouronnes along with four brothers and two sisters.

"It was a normal family, just like everybody else," said a former neighbour, who did not wish to be named.

"He played with my children. He never spoke about religion. He was normal. He laughed a lot."

In his late teens he became known as a petty criminal, and between 2004 and 2010 he was arrested eight times, however he never served any jail time.

An injured man is escorted by police outside the Bataclan. (Getty)

In 2010, he moved to the town of Chartres, 95km south of Paris, where he regularly attended a local mosque and worked in a bakery.

"It was in 2010, that's when he started to become radicalised," the neighbour said. "We don't understand what happened."

French authorities first red-flagged him for having radical views that year, but he dropped off the radar after moving to Algeria in 2012 with his wife and young daughter.

"He had never been implicated in a terrorist network or plot," Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said.

He is thought to have travelled to Syria in 2013 where he received terrorist training but was allowed to return to France.

Worshippers at the mosque near Chartres have denied having anything to do with Mostefai's radicalisation.

"We're grieving, like everyone else," Ben Bammou, a president of a local Muslim group, told MailOnline.

Police have issued a warning for Salah Abdeslam, who was last known to be in Brussels.

Salah Abdeslam – on the run

An international manhunt has been launched for Abdeslam after he was detained and then released by French police just hours after the attack.

The 26-year-old French national was driving from Paris to Brussels when he was stopped and questioned near the Belgian border.

He was let go after showing police identification.

He was already a suspect, his name having appeared on the rental contract for a Volksagen Polo abandoned near the Bataclan Theatre, but that information had not been relayed to border police. The car was found with three loaded Kalashnikovs and a “black rucksack” with unknown contents.

Belgian authorities released a wanted photo of Salah on Sunday and have told the public not to approach him, warning “do not intervene on your own, under any circumstances”.

He is one of three brothers suspected of participating in the attacks.

He was born on July 30, 1984, and had rented the black Seat with Belgian number plates found in Montreuil.

The cafe is located towards the south of Boulevard Voltaire, the road world leaders marched down in a show of solidarity after the Charlie Hebdo attacks in January.

Mohamed Salah Abdeslam – being questioned by police

Another Abdeslam brother, Mohamed, was detained on Saturday in the Brussels suburb of Molenbeek.

The working class and predominately Muslim-populated suburb has become known as a hotbed of Islamic radicalism.

Amedy Coulibaly, who killed four hostages inside a Jewish supermarket in Paris in January this year, is believed to have bought weapons on Molenbeek as is Mehdi Nemmouche, who killed four people inside the Jewish Musuem of Belgium in 2014.

The Syrian passport photo (left) of Ahmed Almuhamed, alongside another photo of the suspect.

Ayoub El Khazzani, a Moroccan who planned to attack passengers on board a train from Paris to Amsterdam, is also thought to have lived in Molenbeek.

"I notice that each time there is a link with Molenbeek," Prime Minister Charles Michel of Belgium said on Sunday.

"This is a gigantic problem. "

Ahmed Almuhamed – killed at the Bataclan

A Syrian passport bearing the name Ahmed Ahmuhamed, 25, was found on the body of a suicide bomber after attackers stormed the Bataclan Theatre and started firing at audience members during a concert by the rock band Eagles of Death Metal.

Ferry tickets show Almuhamed arrived on the Greek island of Leros on October 3, having posed as a Syrian refugee, along with another man, Mohammed Almuhamed, who is believed to be a relative.

Serbian media report he applied for asylum in Serbia before crossing into Croatia and Austria, and making his way to France.

Bilal Hadfi - killed at the Stade de France

Hadfi, 20, blew himself near Gate H of Stade de France several minutes after the first explosion.

The explosion killed no one else besides Hadfi.

French authorities believe Hadfi trained with Islamic State in Syria before returning to France.